Publishers NoteTribute to Sam Francis

(Expanded from SOBRANS,
February 2005; page 2;
with photos, links, and readers comments)

A nation, or even a planet, that recognizes no god other
than its belly will quickly start wallowing in the ignorance, crime,
corruption, and avarice that today afflicts the United States, and
it will find itself unable to free itself of them.

 Sam Francis
This Land Aint Your Land

What can I say in a few words
of a friend of nearly 30 years who was abruptly taken away from
us at the still energetic age of 57? My dear friend  a loyal
compatriot of SOBRANS  columnist and author Dr. Samuel T. Francis died
suddenly on February 15.

We met in
Washington, D.C., while we were both working on Capitol Hill. Sam
was the terrorism expert for the Heritage Foundation while
completing his doctorate in modern history from the University of
North Carolina (Chapel Hill). From there he went to work as
legislative assistant for national security affairs for Senator John P.
East (R-N.C.).

After Senator
Easts death, Sam was hired by the Washington
Times in 1986, first as an editorial writer and resident
staff columnist, and later as deputy editor of the editorial page. I
had the honor of accompanying him to a banquet of the American
Society of Newspaper Editors, where he received  two years in
a row  the Distinguished Writing Award for Editorial Writing in
1989 and 1990. He stayed at theTimes for nine
years until he was abruptly fired for speaking (on his own time) at
an American Renaissance Conference. The
comments in his speech were not at issue. The newspaper objected to his having appeared at the gathering.

Sam had been
a syndicated columnist for the Tribune Media Syndicate for many
years. When his contract was not renewed, he was carried for a
short time by my Griffin
Internet Syndicate until he landed a
contract with Creators Syndicate, which also offers the column of
his close friend, Pat Buchanan. Sam was an advisor to Buchanan
during his presidential bids and greatly influenced his thinking and
policies.

Sam wrote
several books, including Power and History: The Political
Thought of James Burnham (1984); Beautiful
Losers: Essays on the Failure of American Conservatism
(1993); Revolution from the Middle: Essays and Articles from Chronicles, 19891996 (1997); and Thinkers of Our Time: James Burnham (1999), a revised and expanded edition of his earlier book. His many articles and studies of international
and domestic terrorism include his influential book, The Soviet Strategy of Terror (1981; rev. ed., 1985).

Sam published articles or reviews in a number of newspapers and magazines, including the New York Times, USA Today, National Review, The Spectator (London), The New American, The Occidental Quarterly, and Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture, of which he was political editor and for which he wrote a monthly column, Principalities and Powers.

Brilliant and
witty, Sam could have me laughing in no time by a clever turn
of a phrase. He had just signed on as an advisor and resident
scholar of our new Fitzgerald Griffin Foundation. In addition Griffin
Communications was slated to arrange promotion for the new
book he just finished editing, Race and the American
Future (Washington Summit Publishers, 2005).

SOBRANS was
privileged to have Sam present his talk
Unpatriotic Neoconservatives at our annual
anniversary event on December 4, 2004. An audio tape of the
event is available and the video is in production.

As our hope is
in the saving power of Our Lord, we pray for the eternal rest of
our good friend, Sam Francis.

An inspirational thinker, an influential activist, he was an
impressive intellectual and effective grassroots leader. A living
testament to his memory must be our continued commitment to
his values and vision.

 Peter Gemma

I think of Sam Francis and Joe Sobran as being pillars of the real conservative movement, not the
counterfeit one that occupies positions of power today. They are
similar in that both paid a price for stating unpopular truths. Now,
one of the pillars in gone and the rest of us will have to go on as
best we can, knowing that someone irreplaceable has left us.

 DCSOBRANS Charter subscriber

Although I never had the honor of meeting him in person nevertheless I do truly feel a great loss at the passing of Sam Francis. I did think I knew him pretty well  or he me  because he was always so able to articulate sentiments and beliefs I carried inside and was never able to express so clearly, so well, so pleasantly. Because of him I do feel I was able to become a better American, historically, philosophically, intellectually. Because of him years ago  everyone will tell you  I wore Adam Smith neckties and an American flag label pin. Because of him I changed my membership from the Stupid Party to Non-Party Affiliated and was (now) able to criticize both sides. But not nearly so well as he. Because of him I had an anchor in a welcome port. I know that America has lost one of her best. I know he died of a broken heart.

 Don F. Ridgway
Tampa, Florida

My wife and I recently had the distinct pleasure of attending a meeting where Sam Francis was the sole speaker. When truth becomes an elusive entity in a society, knowledge of truth and the courage to speak it are sometimes mutually exclusive. Mr. Francis demonstrated both. His passing will indeed leave a void in the struggles to defend morality and common sense in government and our daily lives. He will indeed be missed.

 Gary Gillespie, M.D.

Thank you so much for letting me know. We will light a 7-day votive candle for Sam at Vespers tonight, and remember him in our prayers. As we pray in the Orthodox Church, May his memory be eternal, meaning, may he be kept alive in Gods eternal memory. My prayers are for you guys too.

 Monk Andrew

Sam Francis was very much like a great surgeon. He brilliantly analyzed the many and varied geo-political cancers eating at the body-politic and then attacked them with a scalpel  his pen  and exposed the rotting areas as threats to the survival of Western Christian Civilization. I shall miss this gifted friend who so fearlessly confronted and, with a few choice phrases, decimated the neo-cons and politically correct liberals as self-serving hypocrites.

 Bob Goldsborough
Editor/Publisher of Washington Dateline

Sam Franciss name on an article was always a bright signal to me that a reading treat was ahead. It truly was a shock to hear of his death. What a sad loss.

 MM

The most precious thing we have is the truth, and one of the rarest things we have is men willing to know and speak the truth. Sam Francis was one of those rare men. Like his mentor, John East, and like another great Southern patriot, Mel Bradford, Sam is too soon taken from us. May his example inspire a new generation to raise up the standard.

 Henry Braddock

Even when I vehemently disagreed with Sams columns, I always enjoyed his writing style. He was one of the most preceptive analysts of how the official right had neoconned the Middle Americans who constitute the Rights base into supporting a phony conservative agenda that paid lip service to limited government, national sovereignty, and traditional values while advancing the welfare-warfare state and globaloney. Sams quick and sharp wit also made him a delightful dinner companion. He will be missed.

 Norman Kirk Singleton
Legislative Director
Congressman Ron Paul

Samuel Francis always had an interesting take on current events and his writings never failed to enlighten or inform. He was one of my favorite writers, in the same league as Joseph Sobran, Patrick Buchanan, William Norman Grigg, and Thomas Fleming. The conservative movement deeply mourns his loss.